About The Blog

This blog is for a first year seminar class called Talking about Freedom at High Point University. The premise of this course is freedom in the United States of America aswell as race relations. As a class we will be exploring civil rights, constitutional reality, freedoms and protetions. We will be focusing on a plethora of historical landmark cases. With that being said we will also be discussing the way The Constitution of the United States shapes peoples lives. My weekly posts will circle around the media and news in the US regarding race relations and freedom.

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

December 9, 2014

C.I.A. lies about interrogation programs

The Central Intelligence Agency positioned a public relations proposal “that would stress information gathered form its disputed interrogation program had played a critical role in the hunt” for Osama bin Laden. Meaning the insights that the C.I.A. collected during their hunt for bin Laden were essential to the process. This past Tuesday the Senate Intelligence Committee announced that the C.I.A. would not have been able to locate and capture bin Laden if they did not use torture. 
One man named Abu Ahmed al-Kuwaiti was a main focus due to his close ties with Bin Laden. After an interrogation with Hassan Ghul, a Qaeda operative, the C.I.A. proposed that Ghul provided “the most accurate” information regarding Kuwaiti’s relationship with Bin Laden. However, Ghul was then subjected to “more enhanced interrogation.” He was hung in a room for over fifty hours and experienced sleep depravation, hallucinations, and paralysis from legs down. 


http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/10/world/senate-report-raises-doubts-about-cia-claims-on-hunt-for-osama-bin-laden.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=a-lede-package-region&region=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=0

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Dec. 1, 2014

Ferguson is Illuminating Modern Day Racism, part ii 

Michael Erik Dyson, writer for the New York Times and author of “Where Do We Go After Ferguson?” claims that “our culture’s fearful dehumanizing of black men materialized once again when when Officer Wilson saw Michael Brown as a demonic force who had to be vanquished in a hail of bullets.” I am sure that statement put an unwashed image in the back of your head. Now there are a couple ways to look at this situation. The fact that young Brown was unarmed yet shot to death does raise a plethora of questions. Was Brown acting out and over reacting around the police officer? Was the Police Officer over reacting? Was this an act of racism? Many more questions surface I am sure however the question whether or not this was an act of racism or not is the most significant. 
Dyson also explains the dreadful fear a black individual experiences when seeing a police cruiser or officer because of the history of the history of racism all over the world. The evolution of racism can date thousands and thousands of years. We felt safe and content with the outcome of the Civil Rights Era, and stopped acknowledging the racism that still takes place all over the United States. 
Dyson used a real life experience he had when he was just 17 years old. Not even a legal adult yet he is assaulted by an officer after being pulled over with a buddy of his and his brother. Dyson said he was going to grab his registration out of his pocket and the next thing he knew he was bashed with the but of the officers piston in the back of the neck forcing him to fall to the ground. Then “promising, with a racial epithet, that he’d put a bullet through my head if I moved again” (Dyson). Long story short, as soon as the police officers ran the registration and found out the vehicle was not stolen they let them go “without a hint of an apology.” It sickens me to think there are still people out there with these disgusting mindsets. It could even the stranger in front of you at Starbucks while you wait for a coffee or someone you sit next to on an air plane. The moral of the story is that the reality of racism cannot be escaped, racism still surrounds our society as we know it and we must take a stand.




http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/30/opinion/sunday/where-do-we-go-after-ferguson.html?_r=0
Nov. 29, 2014

Article: "Where Do We Go After Ferguson?" The New York Times

Ferguson is Illuminating Modern Day Racism, part i

After stumbling upon an article by The New York Times I was more than enlightened on societies ruinous issue regarding racism. The true reality surrounding racism opened my eyes. In our present day racism is looked at as past history that was abolished after the Civil Rights Era, however this is completely inaccurate. For this point at issue needs to be deemed on a global spectrum. 
As many may know, Darren Wilson a white police officer of Ferguson, Missouri shot and killed an unarmed black teen, Michael Brown. Wilson was not indicted for the killing of Brown. The two realities that “were illuminated” premised around the fact that whites and blacks will never agree on racial values, and will always react different in certain situations. The second being the fact that black individuals have infuriated “moral debates.” 

http://www.billboard.com/biz/articles/6221888/op-ed-killer-mike-on-the-problems-underlying-the-chaos-in-ferguson

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/30/opinion/sunday/where-do-we-go-after-ferguson.html?_r=0